Despite HIPAA, patients still lack the ability to access health data and that makes it harder to manage their health and shop around for medical care

Providers also lack access to patient data at the point of care, particularly true when patients see multiple doctors

And payers often lack access to clinical data about populations of covered individuals

WHY IT MATTERS

Today’s certified health IT products lack secure access and sharing of data — like that found in other industries — the kind of capabilities needed to allow for greater innovation, the report says. ONC is eager to see seamless data flow, to accelerate progress.

THE BIGGER TREND

ONC has known that interoperability has been the sticking point for years and thus changed its focus from meaningful use of EHRs to a greater emphasis on data sharing. The average hospital has 16 electronic medical record platforms across various facilities, which helps to explain some of the difficulty. Some are even still using faxes to exchange information, a December ONC report said.

One potential solution is opening up, however. A December report issued by KLAS says more healthcare organizations should join the newly launched CommonWell-Carequality network. Many EHR and health IT vendors have eliminated obstacles to participation in the data-sharing network, going so far as to make it plug-and-play. But, what’s holding them back is governance and organizations themselves dragging their feet on participating in new national interoperability frameworks, such as the CommonWell-Carequality link.

“Even Epic and athenahealth customers report diminished value from their connection when local exchange partners opt not to connect to the national networks,” according to the KLAS report on interoperability. “Until other vendors take an opt-out approach, you as an organization will have to be proactive in promoting local connections to these networks to ensure high value from your connection.”